Martyr Unknown

Martyrs Akepsimas and Aithalas of Egypt

Also known as Akepsimas · Aithalas

Akepsimas, a former pagan priest of Arbel converted after a healing, and Aithalas joined him in confession; they suffered imprisonment and martyrdom.

Feast Day
December 11
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Akepsimas and Aithalas of Arbel

Life

Akepsimas and Aithalas are two martyrs of Persia commemorated together on December 11. According to the synaxarion, Akepsimas had been a pagan priest in the city of Arbel (Arbela) before his conversion to Christianity, while Aithalas served as a deacon of the church at Arbel. Both confessed Christ before the local ruler and were put to death by beheading.

The account of their lives is brief, and the sources do not record the circumstances of their deaths in detail. They are distinct from the Hieromartyrs Akepsimas, Joseph, and Aeithalas commemorated on November 3, with whom they are easily confused owing to the shared names and common Persian setting.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. Before conversion Pagan priest at Arbel Akepsimas served as a pagan priest in the Persian city of Arbel (Arbela).
  2. Conversion Healing and confession of Christ Akepsimas received healing through the prayers of a Christian bishop and was converted to Christianity, after which he boldly confessed his new faith.
  3. Martyrdom Imprisonment and beheading Akepsimas was imprisoned for confessing Christ, and Aithalas, a deacon of the Arbel church, was imprisoned with him. Brought before the ruler, both again confessed their faith and were beheaded.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context

The martyrs belong to the broader body of Persian martyrs venerated in the Orthodox calendar, a setting in which a convert from the established Persian religion who openly professed Christianity could face execution. The synaxarion places both at Arbel (Arbela); some later calendar references give the date of their martyrdom as the year 354 and locate it at Arbela in Assyria, though the primary account leaves the period of their suffering unspecified.

The names Akepsimas and Aithalas (Aeithalas) recur among the Persian martyrs, and this December 11 commemoration is recorded as distinct from the better-known Hieromartyrs Akepsimas the bishop, Joseph the presbyter, and Aeithalas the deacon kept on November 3.

Notes

Distinct from the Hieromartyrs Akepsimas of Nov 3.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints